Braille pattern dots-26
⠀ | ⠁ | ⠃ | ⠉ | ⠙ | ⠑ | ⠋ | ⠛ | ⠓ | ⠊ | ⠚ | ⠈ | ⠘ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
⠄ | ⠅ | ⠇ | ⠍ | ⠝ | ⠕ | ⠏ | ⠟ | ⠗ | ⠎ | ⠞ | ⠌ | ⠜ |
⠤ | ⠥ | ⠧ | ⠭ | ⠽ | ⠵ | ⠯ | ⠿ | ⠷ | ⠮ | ⠾ | ⠬ | ⠼ |
⠠ | ⠡ | ⠣ | ⠩ | ⠹ | ⠱ | ⠫ | ⠻ | ⠳ | ⠪ | ⠺ | ⠨ | ⠸ |
⠀ | ⠂ | ⠆ | ⠒ | ⠲ | ⠢ | ⠖ | ⠶ | ⠦ | ⠔ | ⠴ | ⠐ | ⠰ |
The Braille pattern dots-26 ( ⠢ ) is a 6-dot braille cell with the middle left and bottom right dots raised, or an 8-dot braille cell with the upper-middle left and lower-middle right dots raised. It is represented by the Unicode code point U+2822, and in Braille ASCII with the number 5.
Preview | ||
---|---|---|
Unicode name | BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-26 | |
Encodings | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 10274 | U+2822 |
UTF-8 | 226 160 162 | E2 A0 A2 |
Numeric character reference | ⠢ |
⠢ |
Braille ASCII | 53 | 35 |
Unified Braille
In unified international braille, the braille pattern dots-26 is used to represent an unrounded open-mid to close-mid front vowel , such as /e/, /e̞/, or /ɛ/ when multiple letters correspond to these values, a question mark, or is otherwise assigned as needed.[1]
Table of unified braille values
French Braille | ? (question mark), mathematical subscript mark |
---|---|
English Braille | en |
English Contraction | enough |
German Braille | or |
Bharati Braille | ऎ / য় / ୟ / ఎ / ಎ / എ / எ / ඒ [2] |
Icelandic Braille | ? (question mark) |
IPA Braille | /ə/ |
Russian Braille | ? (question mark) |
Slovak Braille | ? (question mark) |
Irish Braille | en |
Thai Braille | ื e͞u |
Other braille
Japanese Braille | -w- (gō-yōon [1] |
---|---|
Korean Braille | -m / ㅁ [1] |
Mainland Chinese Braille | e/o [1] |
Taiwanese Braille | ê / ㄝ |
Two-Cell Chinese Braille | w- |
Nemeth Braille | 5 [2] |
Gardner Salinas Braille | subscript mark [3] |
Notes
Look up ⠢ in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
- ^ a b c d e "World Braille Usage". UNESCO. Retrieved 2012-04-19..
- ^ a b "Introductino to Bharati Braille". Retrieved 25 April 2013. Cite error: The named reference "Acharya" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ "Index of Topics in Braille Section". Oregon State University Science Access Project Braille topics. Retrieved 2012-04-29.